On Tuesday, April 4, 2023 at 2:54:28 PM UTC-7, Popping Mad wrote:
On 4/4/23 15:40, erik simpson wrote:
Here, we report carbon-nitrogen-iron geochemical data from the fossiliferous black shales and adjacent diamictites of the Nantuo Formation. Iron-speciation data document dysoxic-anoxic conditions in bottom waters, whereas nitrogen isotopes record
aerobic nitrogen cycling perhaps in surface waters. These findings indicate that habitable open-ocean conditions were more extensive than previously thought, extending into mid-latitude coastal oceans and providing refugia for eukaryotic organisms during
the waning stage of the Marinoan Ice Age.
that is a near rewrite of the textbooks for snowball earth
Related
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33000514/
Related for sure, but that reference discussses the chemistry of deep, anoxic water and the
metabolism of bacteria involved with sulfer processing. Today's article focusses on the continuity of eukayryotic
algae in shallow oxygenated water in "refugia" found not only near the equator, but also at mid-latitides (30-40N).
See the authors' Fig 3 for a comparison of snow- or slush-ball models.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)